We study visual servoing in a framework of detection and grasping of unknown objects. Classically, visual servoing has been used for applications where the object to be servoed on is known to the robot prior to the task execution. In addition, most of the methods concentrate on aligning the robot hand with the object without grasping it. In our work, visual servoing techniques are used as building blocks in a system capable of detecting and grasping unknown objects in natural scenes. We show how different visual servoing techniques facilitate a complete grasping cycle.

2008

One of the most general frameworks for phrasing control problems for
complex, redundant robots is operational space control. However, while
this framework is of essential importance for robotics and well-understood
from an analytical point of view, it can be prohibitively hard to achieve
accurate control in face of modeling errors, which are inevitable in com-
plex robots, e.g., humanoid robots. In this paper, we suggest a learning
approach for opertional space control as a direct inverse model learning
problem. A ï¬rst important insight for this paper is that a physically cor-
rect solution to the inverse problem with redundant degrees-of-freedom
does exist when learning of the inverse map is performed in a suitable
piecewise linear way. The second crucial component for our work is based
on the insight that many operational space controllers can be understood
in terms of a constrained optimal control problem. The cost function as-
sociated with this optimal control problem allows us to formulate a learn-
ing algorithm that automatically synthesizes a globally consistent desired
resolution of redundancy while learning the operational space controller.
From the machine learning point of view, this learning problem corre-
sponds to a reinforcement learning problem that maximizes an immediate
reward. We employ an expectation-maximization policy search algorithm
in order to solve this problem. Evaluations on a three degrees of freedom
robot arm are used to illustrate the suggested approach. The applica-
tion to a physically realistic simulator of the anthropomorphic SARCOS
Master arm demonstrates feasibility for complex high degree-of-freedom
robots. We also show that the proposed method works in the setting of
learning resolved motion rate control on real, physical Mitsubishi PA-10
medical robotics arm.

Dexterous manipulation with a highly redundant movement system is one of the hallmarks of hu-
man motor skills. From numerous behavioral studies, there is strong evidence that humans employ
compliant task space control, i.e., they focus control only on task variables while keeping redundant
degrees-of-freedom as compliant as possible. This strategy is robust towards unknown disturbances
and simultaneously safe for the operator and the environment. The theory of operational space con-
trol in robotics aims to achieve similar performance properties. However, despite various compelling
theoretical lines of research, advanced operational space control is hardly found in actual robotics imple-
mentations, in particular new kinds of robots like humanoids and service robots, which would strongly
profit from compliant dexterous manipulation. To analyze the pros and cons of different approaches
to operational space control, this paper focuses on a theoretical and empirical evaluation of different
methods that have been suggested in the literature, but also some new variants of operational space
controllers. We address formulations at the velocity, acceleration and force levels. First, we formulate
all controllers in a common notational framework, including quaternion-based orientation control, and
discuss some of their theoretical properties. Second, we present experimental comparisons of these
approaches on a seven-degree-of-freedom anthropomorphic robot arm with several benchmark tasks.
As an aside, we also introduce a novel parameter estimation algorithm for rigid body dynamics, which
ensures physical consistency, as this issue was crucial for our successful robot implementations. Our
extensive empirical results demonstrate that one of the simplified acceleration-based approaches can
be advantageous in terms of task performance, ease of parameter tuning, and general robustness and
compliance in face of inevitable modeling errors.

In this paper we introduce an improved implementation of locally weighted projection regression
(LWPR), a supervised learning algorithm that is capable of handling high-dimensional input data.
As the key features, our code supports multi-threading, is available for multiple platforms, and
provides wrappers for several programming languages.

Our goal is to understand the principles of Perception, Action and Learning in autonomous systems that successfully interact with complex environments and to use this understanding to design future systems